And war is often a deterrent, not a catalyst, to that end. In fact, God's mercy can often be found in the battlefield - not because he sanctions violence, but rather, because our hearts are most vulnerable in those moments when we accept our mortality.
As Lewis states, "[i]n wartime, not even a human can believe he is going to live forever."
There are some who suggest that 4,000 deaths in a current conflict are unacceptable. In some respects I agree - even one is too many for the family and friends of that one. But in the midst of crisis and conflict, God prompts us to seek causes and virtures higher than self.
What was the resulft of 9/11? Anger, fear, uncertainty no doubt. But it also brought many individuals to their knees, not just in anquish and despair, but in prayer. Because it is at those moments that God helps us understand these basic truths:
- We are not going to live forever
- Life can be cruel and unjust and painful
- We need a savior and redeemer
So when those sleepless nights come, let us turn to the one whose mercies are new every morning.
Great is Thy Faithfulness, oh Lord our God.
1 comment:
At times war does what suffering does--it makes us long for the work of God. For his justice to put wrong things right and for his mercy to change the wrong in me.
War is an ugly picture, but an effective searchlight. It illumines what lies in the heart, to enable us to cry out for deliverance in peace, or in repentence and transformation.
War is a shallow reflection of the work God has shown in the cross, where his full wrath was poured out on his lovely son so that we enemies could be deliverd from the domain of darkness and brought into the kingdom of his beloved son.
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